Israeli Hotline Attacks Mixed Marriages

Daily Mail: Racist extremists who set up a ‘hotline’ to inform on Jews in a relationship with ‘Arabs’ and who targeted Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg are openly peddling hate and violence – but the Israeli government won’t act.
Lehava, a radical fringe group in Israel, hunts down people sleeping with ‘goys’ – or non-Jews ‘- then ‘persuades’ them to separate, attacks Christians as ‘vampires’ and ‘bloodsuckers’ and is justifying attacks on churches using the Bible.
It accused supermodel Bar Rafaeli of ‘diluting the Jewish race’ if she did not split up Leonardo DiCaprio and has faced calls to be banned by the Pope.
Yet despite being under investigation for four years, the hate-filled campaigners operate in the central square of Jerusalem where they openly incite violence every Thursday night, the eve of the Israeli weekend.
And leader Benzi Gopstein boasted to MailOnline that he receives ten calls a day from Jewish people informing on friends who are dating non-Jews.

Emerging from a dimly-lit archway of a cobbled alley in the holy city of Jerusalem, waving black flags and shaking their fists in the air, they look like a gang of thugs.
The ‘whole meaning of life,’ Dov, a 21-year-old activist and Lehava coordinator for the central Israeil town of Modiin area explains, is to serve God and let the Bible guide your reason.
‘To do what God says you’re supposed to do, not what you think in your head that you’re supposed to do. And if you marry a non-Jew, it just means ‘I don’t give a rat’s ass about what God says -I want to be like everyone else who don’t have a God.’
Founded in 2009, Lehava means ‘the flame’, and is also an acronym in Hebrew for ‘Preventing Assimilation in the Holy Land’. For the activists, a relationship between a Jew and a non-Jew is a Biblical sin – and something to be fought against.
It went so far as to set up a ‘hotline’ enabling others to inform on those who have relations with non-Jews, termed ‘goys’.
‘If you are in contact with a goy and need assistance, press one,’ the Hotline’s answer phone message stated, the Times of Israel reported.
‘If you know a girl who is involved with a goy and you want to help her, press two.
‘If you know of a goy who masquerades as a Jew or is harassing Jewish women, or of locations where there is an assimilation problem, press three.’
In a recording of the hotline obtained by MailOnline this week, the group has dropped the specific demand for informers and instead advertises martial arts seminars for the training of the ‘Jewish Honour Guard’.
It also advertises upcoming protests together with ‘La Familia’, a notoriously racist football hooligan group who support ‘Beitar Jerusalem’ – the only football club in Israel’s premier league which has never signed an Arab player.
La Familia activists have in the past ripped and burned copies of the Quran at football matches, held up anti-Arab placards in the bleachers, and shouted insulting anti-Muslim and racist slogans.

Posted in Israel | Comments Off on Israeli Hotline Attacks Mixed Marriages

Terror In Brussels

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Talking heads this morning were already blathering about how Muslims in Europe feel ostracized.

* “Belgium quickly raised its threat status to the maximum level”

That would be to Threat Level Chartreuse, which requires increasing praises of diversity to ten per hour, quintupling the number of Muslim refugees accepted over the previous year, and scores of good white SJW’s performing a flash mob in the nearest bus station or shopping mall singing a song from a Rodgers & Hammerstein musical.

* I went for a hike on the beautiful Akamas Peninisula today. On the way home, I passed a British family whose daughter was wearing a Refugees Welcome T-shirt. I called them arse-holes. I got home to learn about the Brussels atrocity. I think they should drop their kid daughters off at the local refugee centre. They could watch them being raped and tell themselves how good they are.

* In January, Trump called Brussels a “hellhole” and the NYTimes and the usual suspects laughed at him. What are you talking about? It’s a lovely multicultural city, not a hellhole. Anyone with half a brain could see that the large unassimilated Muslim population was a welcoming sea in which terrorists could swim undetected and undetectable, that the city was a powder keg, and the only question was when, not if, someone would light the fuse. But if your mind is addled by leftist ideology you don’t even have half a brain.

* How could this happen? Just yesterday, at AIPAC, Hillary expressed her horror at a rival candidate for the presidency who is “demanding we turn away refugees because of their religion, and proposing a ban on all Muslims entering the United States.”

Hillary continued, “Now, we’ve had dark chapters in our history before. We remember the nearly 1,000 Jews aboard the St. Louis who were refused entry in 1939 and sent back to Europe. But America should be better than this. And I believe it’s our responsibility as citizens to say so.”

The audience applauded enthusiastically. Apparently American Jewish activists feel it would be terrible to distinguish between Jewish and Muslim immigrants. Not in Israel, of course, but certainly in the US.

Hilary concluded with a ringing, “If you see bigotry, oppose it! If you see violence, condemn it! If you see a bully, stand up to him!”

But remember–only if we’re talking about white gentile men

* Obama, Hillary, and the GOPe must hate it the way reality keeps breaking for Trump.

* As is often the case with early reports, the report that the explosion took place at the AA counter was apparently wrong. The part about the guy shouting in Arabic seems to be true.

If you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras. While you may be “jumping to conclusions” if you automatically assume that a terrorist is an Arab and not say some right wing white guy, chances are you will be right most of the time. Assuming that the bomber is an Arab until proven otherwise is a normal, natural and correct way of thinking under current circumstances and only people whose mind is poisoned by ideology of one kind or another will fail to make the obvious presumption. Sometime that presumption later turns out to be wrong but it is a safe bet to start out with it until proven otherwise. Damon Runyon said, “the race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but that’s the way to bet.”

* Years ago some wit wrote the mock headline “Muslim leaders denounce anti-Muslim backlash resulting from tomorrow’s terrorist attack”.

Part of this I think is just quote shopping by reporters looking to fill up time and space. If you are CNN, you have hours of airtime to fill and the basic facts really take only a few minutes to get across so you spend the rest of the time getting “reaction” from the usual suspects. One of the stock characters in this Kabuki theater is the “Muslim community leader” who delivers some canned lines about how Islam is a “religion of peace” and denouncing the “backlash”.

* You know that feeling you get when you’ve eaten the same food over and over and you’re sick of it? Like when you keep eating turkey day-after-day after Thanksgiving.

“Ugh, turkey casserole, then turkey burritos, then turkey sandwiches, then…”

That’s how I feel about terrorist attacks now. I’ve lost count. I’ve lost track of what, when, where, how, etc. (Only WHO is cosistent!)

This morning, I woke up to find my wife silently watching the story from Europe on TV in the living room. She was just sitting there, not bothering to tell me what was going on. It wasn’t like other times, when one of us would say, “hey there’ve been explosions in Europe and lots of people are hurt.” No, it was just another workday morning with just another Islamic terror attack on innocent people like us.

You know that day they’ve been talking about, the day when terror attacks by Muslims will be a regular part of life, something we all just have to live with?

That day has arrived.

* Apparently three of the people injured in the Brussels attacks were Mormon missionaries from the USA.

It’s an interesting tidbit because the Mormon Church and several Mormon politicians emphatically denounced Donald Trump after he called for a moratorium on Muslim immigration to the US.

Posted in Islam | Comments Off on Terror In Brussels

Trump on Brussels: Told you so

The more terror, the more likely America elects Trump.

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Politico: Shortly after news broke of the terrorist attacks in Brussels, Donald Trump was on television. He didn’t wait to consult with the foreign-policy advisors he announced a day earlier; instead he quickly condemned the attacks and argued that they serve as further rationale for some of his most controversial ideas, from closing America’s borders to allowing the greater use torture in the war on terrorists.
Touring the morning talk-show circuit following multiple explosions throughout the Belgian capital on Tuesday, the Republican front-runner stressed that he is the strongest candidate on border control, an issue he said he has emphasized more than any other GOP contender.

Trump said immigrants aren’t assimilating to other countries’ cultures and that America has to be vigilant.
“We have no idea what’s happening. Our government has absolutely no idea what’s happening, but they’re coming into our country,” predicted Trump, offering no further evidence or specificity. “They’re coming in by the thousands and just watch what happens — I’m a pretty good prognosticator — just watch what happens over the years. It won’t be pretty.”
According to Belgian authorities, at least 31 people are dead and more than 170 are injured following a series of explosions — two at an airport and another at a metro station not far from the headquarters of the European Union.
Trump, who called for a temporary ban on Muslims in December following terror attacks, credited his position on border control for his lead in the race for the Republican nomination.
“This is what I’ve been saying for a long time, and I guess it’s at least a small part of the reason why I’m the No. 1 front-runner,” he told “Fox & Friends” in a phone interview. “I mean, people are very concerned about this, and they’re very concerned about the security of this country.”
Trump’s response to this international crisis offers the country—and his rivals—another glimpse into how he might handle the more sobering aspects of serving as commander in chief. As with his candidacy as a whole, his reaction is another Rorschach test: while his blunt statements of strength remind supporters of what they like about Trump, they offer his rivals an opportunity to argue anew that the Manhattan billionaire is too unsophisticated and unprepared to grapple with the difficult decisions that will confront a president.

Posted in Donald Trump | Comments Off on Trump on Brussels: Told you so

Noal Pollak: This is unbelievable. @AIPAC is becoming a safe space.

What happens when you give a woman a man’s job.

From Politico: AIPAC condemns Trump attack on Obama
‘We take great offense to those that are levied against the United States of America from our stage,’ AIPAC’s president says on Tuesday.

The leaders of the largest American pro-Israel lobby distanced themselves on Tuesday morning from Donald Trump’s attacks on President Barack Obama at their policy conference.
Trump addressed the annual Washington gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee on Monday night, and some of his biggest applause lines were his characteristically blunt critiques of Obama, who he said “may be the worst thing to ever happen to Israel, believe me, believe me.”
Story Continued Below
AIPAC president Lillian Pinkus read a statement from the stage on Tuesday to disavow Trump’s remarks.
“We say unequivocally that we do not countenance ad hominem attacks, and we take great offense to those that are levied against the United States of America from our stage,” Pinkus said. “While we may have policy differences, we deeply respect the office of the president of the United States and our president, Barack Obama.”
She also castigated attendees who responded positively to Trump’s comments.
“There are people in our AIPAC family who were deeply hurt last night, and for that, we are deeply sorry,” Pinkus said. “We are disappointed that so many people applauded a sentiment that we neither agree with or condone.”
In his remarks, Trump attacked the Iran deal, as well as Obama and Hillary Clinton. Both, he said, “have treated Israel very, very badly.”
Trump’s speech at AIPAC put the group in an awkward position for many reasons. His harsh rhetoric has prompted consternation among American Jews, many of whom see echoes of Holocaust-era anti-Semitism in his attacks on Muslims and immigrants. Ahead of the conference, supporters of Israel were concerned about his previously stated plans to take a neutral position in negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians.
At the same time, Trump’s skill at channeling anger was once again on display at AIPAC. While the American Jewish community tends to skew Democratic on most issues, Israel has become a growing point of contention, and Obama has fought perceptions that he’s insufficiently supportive of the Jewish state. AIPAC had lobbied against his signature Iran deal.
Pinkus said that Trump’s comments hurt the group’s efforts to broaden the base of the pro-Israel movement.
“Let us take this moment to pledge to each other that in this divisive and tension-filled political season, we will not allow those who wish to divide our movement from the left or from the right will not succeed in doing so,” she concluded.

Posted in AIPAC | Comments Off on Noal Pollak: This is unbelievable. @AIPAC is becoming a safe space.

Are Better Ethnic Restaurants A Strong Argument For Immigration?

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* This was never a serious argument for immigration. The reality is that most Americans are perfectly happy with meatloaf and potatoes every night, and only a small minority of foodies and wealthy people who can waste money eating out really care about exotic cuisine.

* He is right in two senses. The first is his argument that there has never been anything wrong with the middlebrow American, meat and potatoes cuisine based off of the northern European immigrants that were the basic immigrant groups to the US. Its still good today if prepared the right way. What gave it a bad reputation was post 1960s, chain franchise McDonaldization’s of the cuisine, and then the damage done by post 1970s federal agricultural and nutrition policies. Neither of these had much to do with the cuisine itself.

You also didn’t need the post 1965 immigration for variety. You always would have had high end French restaurants in the US, for example, even if the ethnic makeup of the US stayed as it was in 1800. But the conquest of Florida and parts of Mexico would have inevitably brought in Mexican influenced food. With the pre-1925 immigrant groups you still get Italian and Chinese influenced food (I realized all of these wound up being highly Americanized).

But the second sense is that you don’t actually need immigrants to have foreign cuisine, you just have to have people who learn about the foreign food, get excited about it, and want to open a restaurant serving it. You are more likely to get more authentic food that way. Mormon missionaries to Brazil opened up a chain of good Brazilian restaurants in the West (my wife, who is Brazilian, liked the one she ate at), none of them staffed by Brazilians. Julia Child popularlized French cuisine. People in China and Japan like to eat western food when they eat out, my friend who is living in China does this all the time, just like westerners like to eat Chinese and Japanese food. They just copy the recipes, you don’t have poor French and Italian immigrants slaving in kitchens in Shanghai.

* Bad Thai drives out good. But even in high end Thai could exist with middle brow Thai, Sailer’s argument is that mass immigration is not necessary for good “ethnic” cuisine, nor is it sufficient. I’d argue even further…one of the best burrito bar burritos I’ve had was near Fleet Street in London. The owner was a brit who had travelled in Mexico and the US extensively, the grill man was a red haired London Irish guy, and the girls doing the ‘fixings’ part of the bar were eastern european and South American. ‘Now that we have the recipe’ indeed!

That said, I’m a big fan of ‘inauthentic’ “ethnic” restaurants. When I was a wee child, a lot of Chinese restaurants still sported ‘Cantonese Cuisine’ on the neon sign in front of the business. The menus started with pages of ‘tropical’ drinks, and then all the classic appetizers for a poo-poo platter. Delightfully inauthentic, but pretty good. And in a sense, really American. So to many of the Japanese-American favorites (teriyaki anything), and ‘red sauce joints’.

* I’ve proposed a corollary to this Sailer rule several places — it is that cheap line cook labor wrecks a lot of American (and other) cooking.

I had this epiphany in the Mission District in San Francisco, where going to a Hipster retro comfort food place, I was served a stroganoff with a broken sauce, my dinner companion had horrid Mac and Cheese (Kraft’s would have been better) that the waitress advised him to drown in Tapatio. And there, manning the stove in the open concept kitchen was a Guatemalan looking dude. And as my companion said — he’s making $12/hr, he doesn’t care if your sauce is broken.

This is hardly the only time I’ve gotten crappy food at allegedly hip or upscale American places — ‘gastropub’/microbreweries are the usual culprit. I used to blame lousy American raw ingredients, and that may play a part. But I suspect that the dishes that feature huge portions but are at once overseasoned and bland can only be achieved by indifferent, Mexican and other MesoAmerican line cooks. I mean, it’s not like males cook in Mexico, so they really don’t know what they are doing when they get here. Same holds for gardening — people think Mexican ‘gardeners’ know what’s up because they presume they are from ‘the Rancho’. In fact they are pretty much butchers with anything but the simplest lawn.

* Didn’t Esau give up his birthright for a dim sum burrito?

* Whenever I bring my wife’s meat loaf and mashed potato leftovers into the office for lunch, the Chinese guys never fail to tell me how good it smells.

* Still doesn’t beat the unlimited breadsticks and NEVER ENDING PASTA BOWL® at Olive Garden.

* Many of the lower end pizzerias in the NYC area are now run by Greeks, Albanians and Arabs, with Central American workers. It’s a huge change from 20-30 years ago when I was growing up and all pizzerias that I knew of were run by Italians with all white workers.

Thai restaurants in the USA are largely coming from Chinese and Filipinos and mostly suck.

Koreans opened a bunch of horrible Mexican restaurants a few years ago but they seem to have all folded.

Koreans seem to specialize in the most worthless businesses — “variety” stores that sell nothing but doo-rags and fake gold chains to a 100% ghetto black clientele or take out places selling inedible microwaved food — all with Central American slaves doing the physical work and Koreans behind the cash registers. I’ve seen a lot of Korean franchise type businesses open and fold quickly where the people running the joint could not speak English and seemed totally clueless about the products they were trying to sell.

Indians seem to own and staff every single Dunkin’ Donuts and Subway in the NYC area.

Posted in Immigration | Comments Off on Are Better Ethnic Restaurants A Strong Argument For Immigration?

Andy Grove RIP

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Andy Grove was also one of the many brilliant and high achieving Hungarian Jews of the 20th century.

If there was ever a group in the modern age to be studied to find any genes and IQ connection it’s Hungarian Jews.

* Noyce and Moore worked directly for Shockley and famously quit to get out from under him.

Another claimant to the title of Father of Silicon Valley was Shockley’s friend, Stanford dean of engineering Fred Terman, the mentor of Hewlett and Packard. He was the son of Lewis Terman, creator of America’s first IQ test, the Stanford-Binet.

* Another one of the “fathers of silicon valley” is, of all people, Charles Lindberg:

NASA Ames Research Center:

“The Ames Aeronautical Laboratory was established in 1939 by Congress as the west coast site of the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA) following its original site at Langley Field, Virginia. Advocated by Charles Lindberg, the Moffett Field site was chosen for its good flying weather and proximity to local universities. The founding mission was to improve U.S. aircraft performance and speed in response to advances in Germany’s air capability.”

A lot of companies grew up around Moffett. Fairchild Semiconductor was right across the highway from Moffett. Military avionics and radars needed chips and all that. The area is the heart of silicon valley.

NACA, which later became NASA, had an aviation research facility on the East coast (Langley) and Ames (Moffett) on the West coast.

* Trump ought to know about this. Ann Coulter tweeted these economists on Trump’s tariff proposal. They know about this column by Grove. Hopefully Coulter will put them in touch with Trump.

Cruz has copied Trump on immigration, but it will be harder for him, given his donors, to copy Trump on trade. But Trump needs some policy experts to flesh out his ideas on trade.

* Grove was the guy who had the insight that entering price wars in the transistor subcategories the (highly protectionist) Japanese already controlled was Sisyphean for global-aspiring rookies like Intel– better to compete in a different game where the cartels couldn’t draw on R&D wealth, i.e. patents. Politically he had seemed to fall on the globalist side, unquestionably more brilliant than most CATO seminar capitalists, yet still “fiscal conservative/social liberal” to put it in the universally recognized euphemism. Just watched Aaron Sorkin’s Jobs movie which, despite frequent snappy-repartee embellishment, was nonetheless accurate about his subject’s 18th century aristocrat-style disdain for the low-wattage grinders, not to mention honesty, human fallibility, fair play, etc… basically a guy who really disliked society as a whole. I think that’s more common in that milieu than the proverbial “evil Trekkie” ideology a la Ben Kingsley’s character in “Sneakers” or the underground diabolical cave-loungers in “Kingsman.” Surprising amount of bitter dudes who hated their own lives succeeding in post-80s tech.

* Given that there was no daylight between Trump and Cruz, Kasich, etc. on Israel at AIPAC, the only issue for the donor class is jobs, trade, and the hollowing out of American industry to the benefit of the donor class and their Kevin Williamson hanger on snob court jesters.

Grove was right, “mass” defined as enough manufacturers and suppliers to quickly and, I hate to say it, Agilely change directions gives China not the us the lead in information technology and electronics. China would dominate even more if it were not for the innate clannishness, short sightedness (“sure, sell poison infant formula and dog food”) and corruption endemic in China.

Ike in “Crusade in Europe” argues persuasively that the WWII American advantage was the mass of industrial companies that could quickly change gears and produce war material. So this has national security implications.

The reason of course that manufacturing went offshore was the Donor Class and specifically the Gentry Liberals. BernieBros … HATE HATE HATE manufacturing, not only for being polluting, messy, smelly, and dirty but giving Joe Sixpack a decent living and the whole point of being a BernieBro is to HATE HATE HATE the White Working Class like Kevin Williamson squared. Yes transitory profits were made financing new factories in China, and yes the lower labor and regulatory costs in China produce more gross Apple revenue for example. As weighed against half the factory’s output at Hon Hai going out the back door in the grey/black market. And huge delays in shipping product across the Pacific Ocean and often across America. And transport costs, not cheap when oil is up. Yes the financial class played a part but the Gentry Liberals purged manufacturing out of Silicon Valley to save the environment or make things nice for them at the expense of Joe Sixpack.

* One of the things the Republican party forgot over the last 3 decades is that while they were laying off workers they were also losing their loyalty to corporate America. When someone has a good job they have loyalty to their employer, and if that employer needs subsidies, or tax breaks, or educational partnerships, they will vote more often than not to support that employer. Democrats never forgot to butter the bread of their voters. They’ve been supporting the public unions with ever higher taxes and pensions. And supporting the colleges with public loans for education and and endless supply of students from overseas. Republicans as a whole forgot to do that, and they’re paying the price now.

If corporate America had more people in the mold of Andy Grove, then our tax and spending would be a lot healthier. And the execs could be sitting on top of a growing pyramid, rather than fighting a rear-guard action to preserve more of their shrinking empires.

* James Thompson: “The conclusion the authors come to is that to understand the intelligence and social achievements of people in the United States of America, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia you need to know only one thing: how much European ancestry they have. This is pretty much a consistent finding in their samples, but they look through many other possible explanations, such as the contributions of other genetic groups, the special contribution of tourism to economies, and the depredations of other factors like parasite load, all covered in detail in their paper.”

* Didn’t William Shockley do more to create Silicon Valley than anyone else? Of course, his race-realist views have made him a non-person, despite his winning the Nobel prize in 1956.

Grove and the others are Shockley’s heirs.

* Grove was old school tech – IOW very smart. His views are sadly the exception in Silicon Valley today where support of off-shoring and open borders the norm. IMS Noyce before he died was trying to lead a SV initiative to bring back some of the tech industry that already left for Asia, at the he was met with a lot apathy and some derision.

A bit of that story can be found Tom Wolfe’s book that talks about Noyce.

I do hope someone gets the Bloomberg article to Trump or his advisers.

You know it’s sad, I’m old enough to remember companies like Micropolis, Symbolics and Seagate having shops in Northridge back in the 80′s. Rockwell was just a short drive away. Lockheed Skunk Works was in Valencia. There were a raft of smaller companies like MDE and Space Labs who actually designed and built medical equipment in the Valley. In North Hollywood HP had a big presence. It was a great time to be in technology, jobs were plentiful.

It would be nice to see some of that come back. I know if it does, it won’t come to Los Angeles or even California, that’s out of the question. The Democrats are quite against industry of any sort.

* Shockley could have been a Father of Silicon Valley in another sense, as he contributed to Robert Graham’s notorious Repository for Germinal Choice. But, pardon the expression, nothing came of it. Or no one.

Other Nobelists tended to agree with Linus Pauling that “The old-fashioned way is best.”

* When the craptastic film The Social Network came out, the reviewers noted that the writer (Aaron Sorkin) and director (David Fincher) had created scenes where the tech geeks in Silicon Valley had groupies hanging around the offices and mansions doing coke and acting like stereotypical movie groupies–thus leading to the inevitable coked out-groupied-out leaders having fallings out.

Then people started interviewing tech geeks from Silicon Valley, including the Facebookers, and to a man they all thought this was pure nonsense and never happened—they geeks said they would have been thrilled if such things had happened, but women weren’t coding groupies.

That’s really all you needed to know about the awful The Social Network: a film purportedly explaining social media couldn’t get the lifestyle lived by the nerds in social media, and yet the film’s themes were that the nerds’ lives (especially Zuckerberg’s social outsiderness) heavily influenced how they created social media. Basically, Hollywood is incapable of understanding any world outside it’s own—where coked up groupies are in the corner of every mansion and party and office, and drugs and fame fuel falls from grace.

Sorkin really has become insulated from reality. Between The Social Network and The Newsroom, (as well as Studio 60 on Sunset Strip), it’s clear he’s so immersed in the extreme-left media world that he doesn’t actually realize how the world appears and works to anyone not a TV studio exec or a movie producer. He just thinks that a great sketch on SNL will change the entire country’s mind and that if only MSNBC ranted more about how great communism is Fox would die and that everyone lives through success like a film actor after his third hit movie. Really bad, insular stuff.

Posted in America, Donald Trump | Comments Off on Andy Grove RIP

Trump says U.S. should toughen up fight against Islamist militants

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, reacting to attacks at Brussels airport and a metro station on Tuesday, said the United States and Western countries should toughen up in their fight against Islamist militants.
“I would close up our borders,” Trump told Fox News in an interview.
“We are lax and we are foolish,” said Trump, the front-runner in the race for the Republican nomination in the November election.

Posted in Donald Trump | Comments Off on Trump says U.S. should toughen up fight against Islamist militants

Why Did Trump Speak At AIPAC?

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Why did Trump speak at AIPAC? Trump does not pander. But he knows everyone will be watching what HE said at AIPAC. And they are. If he used the word “Palestinian”, everyone will talk about his “mistake” and talk about him. If he said he read the Iran deal, they may laugh, but it gets reported. He gets reported. If he is boring, they will say he showed maturity. That is why Trump spoke at AIPAC. I doubt Trump cares too much about the Middle East (which is a good thing). But this guy keeps getting free press, more free press, more attention and after he does, everyone says: why did he do that? What was the purpose? Every time.

* The centers of power in America are what they are and Trump has to confront them and pick his battles, he can’t fight on every front and expect to win.

Right, and he needed to demonstrate that he is capable of giving a normal, diplomatic political speech calibrated to his audience, as any leader must do.

I know it is a controversial topic in these parts, but the majority of Americans are favorably disposed toward Israel.

Thus, AIPAC was a reasonable place for Trump to show that he is not as far outside the mainstream as the media et al. are claiming.

This speech may have been the start of an effort to look more statesmanlike. Perhaps there would have been a better venue if the need had arisen at a different time, but Trump needed to do this now, and AIPAC was a high-profile opportunity at the right moment.

* Trump is a friend to Israel. Surely even the most Jew obsessed David Duke weirdo already knew that. He obviously does not believe in Nazism or elders of zion or KMac type theories. How anyone could convince themselves otherwise, I will never understand.

Yet it is also clearly true that Trump is the only candidate who will prioritise the interests of the American people. And it is that fact that should mean that all Americans, from David Duke to Louis Farrakhan to Bill Clinton himself should support him.

Now prioritising Americans does not preclude giving a nice, tidy speech to Israel to make them happy, feel loved and show that America will not let them all be murdered in their beds…

Posted in AIPAC, Donald Trump | Comments Off on Why Did Trump Speak At AIPAC?

Terror In Brussels

Comments to Steve Sailer:

* Whatever the cause, the solution is clearly More Immigration.

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* If you’ve already blamed what’s happened in #Brussels on Islamic immigrants, then you are a racist.

You. Are. A. Racist.

* Yes, I openly admit to being a racist. What’s wrong with believing that group x and group y (who differ in ancestry) also differ in allelic frequencies, and that differences in allelic frequency tend group x and group y to different behaviours?

I couldn’t care less if someone calls me a racist.

* Good thing we have all this diversity to give us the strength we need to get through these trying times.

* Brussels is the seat of the EU high command bureaucracy.
The EU, just like Merkel – and The Economist magazine – is rabidly in favor of massive, uncontrolled replacement third world immigration into Europe.

Perhaps these events might possibly have knocked some common sense into the thick Eurocrat skulls.
Don’t hold your breath. This is likely as everyday life in DC knocking commonsense into US congressman heads.

* As we were lectured back in November, this is precisely what the ‘immigrants’ are ‘justifiably’ fleeing from.

* Tomorrow I’m flying from Johannesburg OR Tambo to London Heathrow, with a plane change in Paris. So have this cultural enrichment, as well as the latest iteration of the endless French Air Traffic Control strike saga, as a backdrop. Doubtless the security theatre will be amped up accordingly.

Alas I’m travelling steerage. The joys of modern air travel.

* At least African Americans and Mexicans do not blow themselves up at bus stations.

* Bush and Ashcroft’s executive branch memo on racial profiling from 2003:

President Bush Has Directed that Racial Profiling Be Formally Banned.

In his February 27, 2001, Address to a Joint Session of Congress, President George W. Bush declared that “racial profiling is wrong and we will end it in America.”

Stereotyping Certain Races as Having a Greater Propensity to Commit Crimes Is Absolutely Prohibited.

Some have argued that overall discrepancies in crime rates among racial groups could justify using race as a factor …We emphatically reject this view.

Bush in 2000 debate:

“Secondly, there is other forms of racial profiling that goes on in America. Arab-Americans are racially profiled in what is called secret evidence. People are stopped, and we have to do something about that. My friend, Senator Spencer Abraham of Michigan, is pushing a law to make sure that Arab-Americans are treated with respect. So racial profiling isn’t just an issue at local police forces. It’s an issue throughout our society. And as we become a diverse society, we’re going to have to deal with it more and more. I believe, though — I believe, as sure as I’m sitting here, that most Americans really care. They’re tolerant people. They’re good, tolerant people. It’s the very few that create most of the crises, and we just have to find them and deal with them.”

* American Airlines, so nothing to do with US foreign policy.

* They also hit the metro station Maalbeek near the EU institutions.

I live in Brussels and my wife works very close to that metro (she is OK). Tomorrow I would have been at the airport to pick up a colleague who will now certainly cancel his flight.

I have to admit that I did not like Trump’s AIPAKKK speech but in light of these attacks once again Trump proves himself a hell of a lot smarter than I am.

They targeted an American Airlines counter at Brussels Airport. I wonder if they had any flights going to Salt Lake City this morning?

Belgian TV is not being too cucked out but they are making the obvious link to the arrest of the terrorist last week in Molenbeek.

* Leading Muslim in Norway says pretty much that:

ISIS’s goal from their own publication. A black & white world. What they call “grayzone” is our coexistence zone.

Eliminating the grayzone – the zone of coexistence – and rendering a world as black & white as their own flag. That’s what ISIS wants.

* As long as there are no more than x Jihadis in any group of (x+1) Muslims, we must do everything in our power to settle them in our lands. That single, moderate Muslim has, like, unbelievable human capital. They might even win cooking competitions, and stuff. Totally worth it.

* Yesterday’s London Evening Standard carried a report that London police authorities suspected terrorists were planning up to ten simultaneous attacks in London.

* We can hope that this attack brings some realism to the discussion of Muslim immigration in Europe. Of course, it has occurred just after Germany let in enough immigrants to change it’s reproduction-aged population to about 4% Muslim (in addition to whatever percent Muslim it was before). So I am not sure how much good realism does at this point.

Sort of like the Trojans having a debate on whether to accept the wooden horse after all the Greeks have already scurried out.

* I’ve never understood why terrorism justifies a hugely expensive police state, ongoing war, and assassination of US citizens but not closed borders. What is the logic there?

* Like others have mentioned already, this will only increase immigration and speed up the overall time when all European lands have lost their native population. Those that think “how can this benefit the bombers”, it benefits them not because of the “racists will increase ISIS recruitment” logic, it benefits them precisely because of this ISIS recruitment narrative. Each time this happens the politicians and the good thinkers are forced to double down and increase their anti white activities, and like Sailer has pointed out the “frontlash” in the past, the immigrants are not misinformed as the liberals like to portray them, they have their smart phones and they read the same mass media that is meant of the native population.

* This is the rather astonishing aspect of all this. We are promised that these immigrants are a bountiful font of economic and cultural growth. And when they don’t deliver as promised, it is because WE are intolerant etc. and therefore there needs to be even more immigration.

* “Our diversity, not only in our Army, but in our country, is a strength. And as horrific as this tragedy was, if our diversity becomes a casualty, I think that’s worse,” Casey said.

Posted in Islam | Comments Off on Terror In Brussels

Keeping Extremists Out: The History of Ideological Exclusion and the Need for Its Revival

By James R. Edwards Jr. September 2005

James R. Edwards, Jr., Ph.D., is an adjunct fellow with the Hudson Institute, co-author of The Congressional Politics of Immigration Reform, and contributor to several published volumes concerning immigration issues. His writings have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Times, Human Events, and other publications.

America has often faced the threat of foreigners promoting radical ideologies, including Jacobinism, anarchism, communism, fascism, and now Islamism. It is an unavoidable consequence of mass immigration. The higher the level of immigration, the more likely it is that individuals espousing hatred and violence toward America will gain entry. But whatever the level of immigration, excluding or removing noncitizens from the United States based on their promotion of such beliefs (“ideological exclusion”) can help to protect the country. Historically such efforts have played this role, especially during the 20th century. With the end of the Cold War, Congress effectively repealed ideological exclusion, meaning that only active terrorists on watch lists could be barred, while those promoting the ideologies of such terrorists would have to be admitted. To end this vulnerability, ideological exclusion should be restored, allowing aliens to be excluded or deported not only for overt acts but also for radical affiliations or advocacy. Such grounds for exclusion and removal should be based on characteristics common to the many varieties of extremism, rather than target a specific ideology.

Maintaining control over aliens who wish to enter the United States and over those who already have crossed America’s borders has been a guiding principle of American immigration policy since colonial days. Many of the Founding Fathers, notably many of those who served in the earliest Congresses, sought to ensure that only foreigners who embraced American ideals and republican principles would gain admittance — and it was expected that any who displayed disloyal views after arrival would be deported.

One such policy of exclusion based on an alien’s ideological beliefs came to prominence in the Cold War era, and was effectively eradicated in the 1990 Immigration Act. That law eliminated the 1952 McCarran-Walter Act’s iteration of ideological exclusion. Denounced as a Cold War relic, the use of ideology as a grounds for exclusion met its demise.

However, the advisability of this policy change has been called into question by a new awareness of the wisdom of the Founders and of past congressional immigration controllers in their concern for the beliefs that aliens may harbor. Today, the question has become: Is America left vulnerable because of the virtual elimination of ideological exclusion and the overexpansion of First Amendment protections to noncitizens whose allegiance lies somewhere other than with the United States of America?

Ideological exclusion rightly gives a certain amount of pause because of its nexus between our “nation of immigrants” folklore and “freedom of speech” ideals. While much public invocation of the term “nation of immigrants” to describe America’s immigrant experience is vastly overblown, immigration has indeed played a role in American history that is unique among nations. Though the notion that anybody can become an American oversimplifies the case, the fact is that the United States has exhibited a remarkable willingness and ability to assimilate outsiders.

Likewise, the First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees that Congress shall not infringe upon Americans’ rights to freedom of religion, speech, and press. Americans quite properly hold these rights dear. The Constitution protects these specific rights of Americans for Americans and for America’s benefit. Therefore, to consider where these rights’ appropriate limits lie (because, as the Supreme Court has long recognized, they are not absolute rights) can be uncomfortable.

This Backgrounder begins with a review of exclusion and deportation (also known as removal) policy, highlighting the history of ideological exclusion. Next, it examines the McCarran-Walter ideological exclusion and its demise in 1990. Then, it considers certain parallels between previous concerns that informed exclusionary policies, particularly during the Cold War, and today’s heightened concerns with Islamofascism following the 9/11 attacks. Finally, several policy recommendations are offered.

Exclusion & Deportation in U.S. History

Excluding and removing aliens who exhibited unwanted characteristics has been traditional American practice. Whether by colonial, state, or federal governments, the right to exclude and deport noncitizens has been vigorously exercised in this nation. Indeed, such a right is inherent to the idea of a sovereign nation.

Colonial-Era Exclusion Policies

Even before the United States became a nation, colonial governments placed restrictions on those seeking to settle in their jurisdictions. For example, many colonies rejected foreigners who were likely to become a public charge.1 The British government used the opportunity of colonization to rid itself of thousands of undesirables, including “social misfits, convicts, and men who were driven by desperation to take a chance in the wilds of America.”2 Thus sparked the first grounds for exclusion being written into American law codes, as colonies from the 17th century on took measures to keep out individuals who could not, or would not, support themselves, as well as those who posed a moral or security threat.

America’s founding settlers sought to establish a society; more, a foothold of British jurisdiction in the New World. Harvard’s Samuel Huntington explains:

America is a founded society created by seventeenth- and eighteenth-century settlers almost all of whom came from the British Isles. Their values, institutions, and culture provided the foundation for and shaped the development of America in the following centuries. They initially defined America in terms of race, ethnicity, culture, and most importantly religion. Then in the eighteenth century they also had to define America ideologically to justify their independence from their home-countrymen.3

Huntington notes the characteristic critical attitude of Americans toward immigrants (especially as distinct from settlers). This scrutiny centered on an alien’s character. First as colonies, then as states, early Americans sought to preserve and protect the character of the society they and their forefathers paid so high a price to establish. For example, a Pennsylvania statesman in 1786 decried that “no mode should yet have been adopted for ascertaining the good character of such foreigners as have come to settle among us . . . and we should hold ourselves very deficient in political duty” not to set “an effectual bar against the idle and profligate”4 (italics in original).

Colonial laws to curb the inflow of immigrants of suspect character from becoming part of the newly established society included requirements that ships’ captains supply passenger manifests, duties or bonds imposed on arrivals adjudged as a threat to public order or a burden on society (including non-British in Pennsylvania, for example),5 and forced return of undesirables. As circumstances arose, various approaches were taken in different colonies to control the infusion of undesirables, which included at various times Quakers, convicts (or “gaolbirds”), Catholics, disease carriers, and separatists.6

Old World tensions between Catholics and Protestants, especially given the keen awareness of power struggles and abuses by the religion in power in an age of established denominations, informed measures by which to exclude “papists.” In the eyes of America’s predominantly Protestant community, it hardly seemed prudent to have established a society for religious dissenters from the Old World’s Establishment only to allow a hostile takeover by potential persecutors. Hence, Virginia in 1643 provided for the deportation of Catholic priests within five days of arrival.7

Besides the settlement of victims of European religious persecution, such as French Huguenots and German Palatines, the politics related to established religions factored in. Reaction to the Catholic arrivals “was further intensified by the imperial wars of the eighteenth century, during which Catholic powers and their Indian allies decimated frontier settlements, and by the efforts of Spaniards in Florida to incite slaves to rebel or run away from their masters in Carolina and Georgia.”8 In other words, the close relation between Catholic religious belief and Roman Catholic politics was viewed as likely to influence Catholic immigrants’ ideology and activism against the prevailing Protestant society.

Antebellum Exclusion Policies

Following independence, Americans continued exclusion policies, expanding them in state law. “The new states were unanimous in rejecting . . . Europe’s wastrels and convicts,” turning back “ships carrying transported felons.”9 Exclusion of unwanted new arrivals, deportation of aliens who proved unwanted, and various restrictions on foreigners allowed to stay continued. Many such laws affirmed colonial laws on the books or expanded them. In 1783, Virginia, for example, barred citizenship (then granted by states) to “alien enemies.”10 Nationally, the Articles of Confederation in Article IV kept from “paupers, vagabonds, and fugitives from justice” the privileges of citizenship.11

The Constitution tasked Congress with establishing a uniform naturalization law (Article I, Section 8), while regulation of aliens (and initially, immigration) remained largely a state matter. Events led the Federalist-controlled Congress to act for the preservation of the nascent republic. The French Revolution differed in kind from the American Revolution imposing “liberty” and “equality” with an iron fist, and seeking to spread its radical ideology throughout Europe and even to involve the United States on its side. Clear-headed Americans knew their country must not pick sides between their former ally, now a radical regime, and their former colonizing foe, from which they had won independence.12

The French revolutionary spirit, or Jacobinism, was exported to the New World via immigration, sparking grave foreign and domestic policy crises. Domestically, foreign-born French sympathizers and their ideological message risked the United States’ neutrality. The American tour of Citizen Edmond Genet in 1793 further deepened American political divisions. Abroad, a treaty dispute led to France’s refusal to seat the American ambassador in 1796 and the subsequent seizure of American merchant ships at sea. Thus, Congress enacted the Alien Enemies Act and the Alien Act in 1798.13

The Alien Enemies Act built upon the president’s war powers, authorizing him to apprehend, restrain, secure, and remove alien enemies residing in the United States during times of hostility with their native country. The Alien Act (often linked with the Sedition Act, perhaps the most controversial of the Federalist laws, which targeted newspapers) granted the president discretionary authority to apprehend and deport aliens who might subvert the nation.14 These were the first federal laws directed at safeguarding the nation against aliens, in large part based on their ideology. The Alien Act was repealed, along with the Sedition Act, in the Jeffersonian backlash at perceived Federalist overreach; the Alien Enemies Act remains in force.

Even Republicans (i.e., Jeffersonians) who opposed the Alien and Sedition Acts, notably in the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, shared the core skepticism toward foreigners who lacked republican character and held political views contrary to American ordered liberty. For instance, James Madison backed a residency requirement prior to naturalization, telling the first Congress in 1790 that it was “necessary to guard against abuses. They should induce the worthy of mankind to come, the object being to increase the wealth and strength of the country. Those who would weaken it were not wanted.” He had previously said at the Constitutional Convention that “[h]e wished to maintain the [American] character . . . [by admitting] foreigners of merit and republican principles.”15 Thomas Jefferson expressed doubts about mass immigration by aliens lacking republican virtue: “They will bring with them the principles of the governments they leave . . . or, if able to throw them off, it will be in exchange for an unbounded licentiousness.”16

University of Dallas Professor Thomas West, examining the Founders’ views on immigration, concludes “that every people has a right to exclude aliens that it deems undesirable, and a duty to exclude aliens whose excessive numbers or questionable character might endanger the citizens’ liberty.”17 His analysis of the historical record led him to write, “None of the Founders gave a theoretical account of the right of a political community to exclude would-be immigrants. That is because such a right was obvious to all as an inference from the general principles they all shared.”18 In fact, despite Jefferson’s election as president in 1800, the Republican takeover of Congress, and repeal of the Alien Act, Jeffersonians “used the [Alien Enemies] Act’s provisions to intern and neutralize unnaturalized British immigrants during the War of 1812.”19

Early Federal Exclusion Legislation

Most exclusion and removal laws operated at the state and local level throughout the antebellum period. Undesirable aliens were categorized largely the same as they had been during colonial days.20 However, Congress enacted the first federal exclusion law on March 3, 1875. This law prohibited the entry of alien criminal convicts and prostitutes, responding to reports of immigrants arriving who were paupers, convicts, insane, unable to support themselves, and Chinese women “brought for shameful purposes.” The 1875 law exempted from exclusion aliens convicted solely on political charges.21

In 1882, Congress added to criminals and prostitutes as exclusionary grounds both mental defectives and likely public charges. The Chinese Exclusion Act also became law that year, which cut off Chinese immigration because of low-wage Chinese workers flooding the American labor market. As a further deterrent, the Act withheld the privilege of naturalization from Chinese immigrants. The Chinese Exclusion Act remained in force until 1943. In 1891, another exclusion law barred admittance to aliens who were insane, infected with contagious disease, practiced polygamy, or convicted of a crime of moral turpitude.22 It should be noted that polygamy was largely an ideological characteristic. Although it was a criminal act with religious connotations, it reflected an ideological worldview.

Besides a late 19th century rise in immigration levels that fed societal upheaval, including immigrant labor unrest and detrimental economic effects on American workers, foreign-born political radicals stirred public concern. Beyond urban machine politics that relied on alien grist and rising religious differences between largely Protestant natives and Catholic immigrants, alien troublemakers — anarchists — were afoot on American soil. Tichenor says:

The 1886 bombing of Haymarket Square in Chicago occurred during a national strike initiated by the Knights of Labor, but its hasty attribution to seven anarchists of whom six were immigrants persuaded many Americans that terrorism, labor upheaval, and political radicalism originated abroad.23

President William McKinley, who had campaigned on a platform of tariffs and “big tent” themes directed at immigrants (“America for Americans, native and naturalized”), fell to an assassin’s bullet in 1901. Leon Czolgosz, called “an anarchist of American birth but obviously foreign extraction,” sparked congressional action to add anarchists to the exclusion list.

The 1903 law provided for exclusion and deportation of alien anarchists — those foreigners who believe in or “advocate the overthrow by force of violence of the Government of the United States or of all governments or of all forms of law, or the assassination of public officials.” The 1903 Act also both bolstered public health exclusions and provided for limited exceptions for certain diseased aliens.24 Higham reports that the first alien removed under this law was John Turner, “a mild-mannered English anarchist who made his second trip to the United States in 1903, [who] was arrested by a bevy of secret service men and deported before he had a chance to speak in public.”25 In other words, the new exclusion law barred aliens on the basis of ideological views, as had the Alien Acts just over a century earlier.

Congress further widened exclusionary grounds in 1907, including admitted criminals. It expanded such categories of barred foreigners to include “imbeciles,” those carrying tuberculosis, and “feeble-minded persons,” as well as persons whose mental or physical weaknesses affected their ability to support themselves. Again in 1917, exclusion laws were bolstered — this time, by the addition of a literacy test for aliens over 16 years of age. Other 1917 exclusions included aliens “of constitutional psychopathic inferiority” and chronic alcoholics, stowaways, vagrants, and aliens who had been deported.26 Wartime concerns led to further restrictions of foreigners based on their ideological, political, and radical beliefs and activities. Maguire writes that World War I led to

. . . legislation prohibiting the entry of anarchists, subversives and others dangerous to national security [being] recodified. Further attention was also given to prohibiting the entry of those engaged in sabotage, or those engaged in writing, publishing, and otherwise advocating proscribed activities. Also excluded were aliens who were members of associations involved in the circulation of such material.27

A realistic, security-conscious policy thus was instituted to protect the nation from the dangerous beliefs, and actions prompted by those beliefs, of people who did not belong to the body politic of the United States and therefore could not claim rights to this nation’s protection.

Socialist, anarchist, and communist organizations, such as the Industrial Workers of the World, generated labor strikes, riots, and bombings, as well as disseminating radical propaganda, in wartime and postwar America. Foreigners held prominent roles in these groups’ leadership. The alien exclusion and deportation laws enabled U.S. authorities to fight back against the alien threat that came to be known generally as the Red Scare. For example, 44 aliens were held in connection with a 1919 strike in Washington State and prosecuted for deportation; three actually were deported.28

U.S. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer — his own home the target of a radical’s bomb — ordered the investigation of radical organizations. One group, the Union of Russian Workers, identified itself as communist, atheist, and anarchist. Police searches of such groups turned up evidence, including radical literature and, in some instances, bomb-making material.29 Arrests by the hundreds followed in what were called the Palmer raids, but few deportations ensued. More than 6,000 deportation warrants were issued, with about 4,000 served on alien communists and anarchists. Just over 500 alien radicals actually left the country of the 1,119 ordered deported.30

Arguably, exclusionary laws’ bark was worse than their bite, in practice. Nevertheless, even if they were applied less vigorously than they might have been, these laws helped safeguard America through the time of the Bolshevik revolution, the rise of Nazism, communism, and fascism.

World War II, the Cold War, and Beyond

Ideological assaults from foreigners continued after World War I and the Palmer raids. Immigrants provided fertile soil for recruiting for advocates and activists of foreign extremist causes. In fairness, while many immigrants embraced the radical ideas, others sought affiliation with people of their own ethnic and cultural origins. However, after 1920s immigration restrictions were enacted, “Communist activity became more open and militant” in the Depression Era, leading Rep. Hamilton Fish’s congressional committee to recommend the outright exclusion of communists under U.S. immigration law.31

Soviet communists sought to infiltrate the United States and to undermine it politically, as The Venona Secrets makes plain. Throughout the 20th century, the Communist International, or Comintern, directed spies and recruitment and propaganda activities on American soil from the Soviet Union. For example, the Comintern in 1936 ordered “‘a campaign . . . in the shortest possible period among the members of the CP [Communist Party] so that they will do everything in their power to become citizens of the USA,'” while average members with immigration problems were told to leave the party.32

Communist Russia took advantage of the massive inflow of Eastern Europeans that occurred before the 1920s, when U.S. immigration restrictions were adopted and immigration levels thus fell precipitously. The Communist Party in America at the time of Whittaker Chambers’s joining was

. . . overwhelmingly foreign-born. Only one out of seven Party members spoke English well enough to be in an English-speaking branch. The other six out of seven were members of branches that spoke their native language — three-quarters of them came from the former Tsarist Empire.33

Hitler’s Nazi Party took power in Germany in the 1930s, with war breaking out in Europe. The Nazi war machine, Mussolini’s regime in Italy, Soviet communism pushing for world influence, as well as Imperial Japanese designs pressing in Asia, presented the United States with a foreign policy handful. A 1939 Supreme Court ruling in Kessler v. Strecker held that alien membership in a proscribed group only applied to present membership. Congress soon made it clear that past membership would be grounds for excluding aliens for ideological reasons. A 1940 law barred foreigners who had belonged to a subversive organization in the past, as well as requiring aliens in the United States to register and be fingerprinted. Another law denied a visa to and the entry of foreigners whose planned activities would “endanger the public safety.”34

Even before the United States was drawn into World War II, the domestic threat became more serious. As tensions mounted, ideological exclusion and removal, as well as alien registration and control laws, became all the more important tools for the U.S. government to have at hand.

Secret intelligence operations by the U.S. military, known as MAGIC, intercepted and decoded Japanese diplomatic messages beginning in the late 1930s. These communications evidenced the extent of Japan’s espionage on American soil. By late 1940, MAGIC unveiled Japan’s plans for spying in the United States, directing the recruitment of agents from “our ‘Second Generations’ and our resident nationals” among others.35

As it had been invoked in previous wars, the Alien Enemies Act served as the basis for designating German, Japanese, and Italian nationals as enemy aliens, along with prudential controls during World War II, such as prohibiting enemy alien travel into certain areas, restricting alien property ownership, and internment (not only of Japanese nationals, but other Axis nationals). The 1940 Alien Registration Act resulted in nearly five million foreign nationals registering with the government during World War II.36 The context of the times saw liberal columnist Walter Lippman writing in 1942:

The enemy alien problem on the Pacific Coast, or much more accurately, the fifth column problem, is very serious and very special. . . . The Pacific Coast is officially a combat zone; some part of it may at any moment be a battlefield. Nobody’s constitutional rights include the right to reside and do business on a battlefield.37

German fifth columns had assisted Hitler’s European conquests, thanks to “German citizens and Nazi sympathizers” living in such nations as Poland, Belgium, Holland, and France.38 Thus, the perceived threat was realistic.

Whereas Axis enemies during a state of war provided a somewhat clearer target for exclusion and other immigration control policies, Soviet communism had always been more surreptitious. Soviet agents, front groups, and infiltration and espionage techniques composed a broad strategy to undermine the United States. Immigrants as well as traitorous natives played a role in the communist threat. For instance, German refugee Karl Frank, alias Paul Hagen, was investigated by the FBI in 1945. His internal security case confirmed that Hagen was a communist and active in a communist front group, New Beginning.39

Soviet aggression escalated after the Second World War, and with it tensions mounted between the USSR and the United States. This was the Cold War, when ideological exclusion became an even more vital public policy instrument. During this period, a refugee problem arose in which people posed as refugees seeking admission using bad documents. In 1948, the Displaced Persons Act barred refugee frauds from U.S. admittance.40

While Soviet espionage of the American-British atomic bomb project was proceeding by 1941, the communist effort was aided by a Manhattan Project insider, Klaus Fuchs, a German refugee, who supplied the Soviet Union with valuable atomic secrets.41 The postwar 1940s and 1950s saw Russian aggression throughout Eastern Europe, the closing off of East Germany and East Berlin, the successful theft of atomic weapons know-how, and continued Soviet militarization with a nuclear accent. Meanwhile, Soviet designs gained a clear advantage from the ability of its agents and sympathizers to travel with relative ease in and out of the United States. The realization of this vulnerability gave rise to enactment of the 1950 Internal Security Act.

A sign that Cold War Congresses took the communist menace seriously and meant to deal with it realistically and effectively, this national security measure forbade the entry of persons likely to perform subversive activities in the United States. The codified security exclusions named such activities as sabotage, espionage, and public disorder. New categories of exclusion included membership in the Communist Party or its affiliates. This marked the first designation in law of the party’s name, and achieved the “specific exclusion of Communists and Fascists from admission into the United States.”42 The law was amended the next year to allow the admittance of involuntary members of communist organizations.43

The McCarran-Walter Act and Ideological Exclusion

The McCarran-Walter Act of 1952, or the Immigration and Nationality Act, reorganized and recodified all U.S. immigration laws, including exclusion policies. This Act became law over President Truman’s veto. It eased family separation for excluded individuals through waivers and emphasized immigrant character (barring criminals, communists, frauds, and other undesirables), health (barring such mental defectives as “idiots, imbeciles, morons, and persons of border-line intelligence”) and ability (setting a labor test and prioritizing entry by aliens with needed job skills).44 In many ways, it represented the high-water mark of American ideological exclusion policy.

Sen. Patrick McCarran (D-Nev.) and Rep. Francis Walter (D-Pa.) included ideological exclusions among the many grounds for excluding aliens from American soil, based on well-founded fears arrived at after much congressional inquiry. For example, a late 1940s Senate Judiciary subcommittee report concluded that current legal loopholes resulted in the admission of “criminals, Communists, and subversives of all descriptions . . . like water through a sieve.”45

Sen. McCarran had told the Senate, “We must bring our immigration system into line with the realities of Communist tactics.”46 What realities? Former communists, including Whittaker Chambers, Elizabeth Bentley, and Louis Budenz, who had informed the FBI about their communist subversion and provided specific, verifiable information about communist operatives and operations, appeared at congressional hearings to expose the enemy operating from within.47 These witnesses

. . . testified that the real control of the [communist] party in the United States was in the hands of foreign agents who entered and left the country at will. Maurice Malkin, another former Communist, declared, ‘The Communist Party of the United States was organized and has been led by aliens since its inception in 1919.’ These witnesses recommended much more stringent immigration laws in regard to subversives in order ‘to cut the lifeline of the party.’48

Congressional efforts culminated in the spring of 1951, with joint House and Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on McCarran and Walter’s reintroduced legislation. The latest McCarran bill largely followed the Internal Security Act’s exclusions of subversives. However, the legislation allowed the entry of former members of subversive groups, if membership was nominal and forced for getting jobs or ration cards. In order to be regarded as admissible, such alien members would have to had renounced their former allegiance and for two years have actively opposed the radical ideology.49 However, government witnesses warned that it would not be possible to determine the truth about aliens seeking entry from closed nations, and it would be better to “err in favor of American security.”50

The McCarran-Walter Act became law by overwhelming majorities in both bodies of Congress, with sufficient strength to overcome President Truman’s veto. Truman objected to retaining the national-origins system.) It eventually listed 33 categories of excludable aliens (nine of them new). Regarding an alien’s ideology, three grounds related to security and politics. Section 212(a)(27) kept out aliens who would participate in activities that would be prejudicial to the public interest or public safety. Section 212(a)(28) excluded aliens who belong to subversive organizations or teach or advocate prohibited views. Section 212(a)(29) barred aliens deemed likely to engage in subversive activities once here. This noncontroversial subsection kept out aliens expected to engage in espionage, sabotage, public disorder, or activity that risks national security or use of force or violence to overthrow the U.S. government.

Ideological exclusion proved a valuable policy tool for the Cold War by enhancing efforts to ferret out Soviet agents and fight communist subversion. But its application, compared with other grounds for exclusion and deportation, appears measured. From 1892 to 1980, the Immigration and Naturalization Service excluded 1,369 aliens as subversives or anarchists. Of them, 1,098 such exclusions occurred in the 1950s, or about 5 percent of all INS exclusions that decade. These grounds were employed to deport threatening aliens, too, but not greatly. Only 230 subversive or anarchist aliens were deported on those grounds in the 1950s, making it the third-lowest deportation category of the decade of 13 on INS tables, and only the fourth-ranking decade for such deportations between 1908 and 1990.

The 1960s saw 128 aliens excluded as anarchists or subversives, and 15 aliens removed for those reasons. In every decade, far more aliens were excluded or deported for criminal or narcotics violations or some other reason than were kept out or sent back for dangerous ideology or radical activism.

The State Department says it does not have available visa refusal data from 1952 to 1962. Therefore, it is difficult to draw firm conclusions regarding ideological exclusion’s application by the State Department in the early years of McCarran-Walter.

Ideological Expansion by Congress and Courts

In 1951, the Supreme Court upheld the 1940 Alien Registration Act (or Smith Act) convictions of 12 Communist Party conspirators seeking the overthrow of the U.S. government in Dennis v. United States. In 1952, the court ruled in Harisiades v. Shaughnessy in favor of deporting aliens who previously belonged to subversive groups.51 But the court was about to shift radically, as the same social forces that gave rise to the 1965 immigration overhaul, scrapping the national-origins quota system, fed elite sentiment to expand the First Amendment far beyond its original meaning. This mindset included foreigners’ speech.

A number of court decisions expanded the First Amendment far beyond the Founders’ original intent. For example, the judiciary loosened the long-standing protections in law that safeguarded individuals from defamatory expression and removed the legal consequences of libelous attacks. One such case was New York Times v. Sullivan in 1964. In this decision, the U.S. Supreme Court inordinately raised the standard of proof for public officials and public figures claiming defamation. Thus, unless a plaintiff could prove the publication occurred despite knowledge of falsity or in reckless disregard of the truth, even falsehoods that defame public figures now enjoyed “constitutional” protection.52

The same judicial activism informed other rulings with just such an expansive interpretation of the First Amendment. The 1969 case of Brandenburg v. Ohio overturned a criminal statute under which a Ku Klux Klansman had made veiled threats against the U.S. president, Congress, and the judiciary. The Supreme Court ruled that “mere advocacy” of illegal acts instead of “inciting or producing imminent lawless action” should enjoy “constitutional” protection.53 Other cases stretched the First Amendment’s protection to include not only broad written and spoken ideas, but symbolic expression such as clothing, actions such as burning the flag, and vulgarity.54

Into this context fell the exclusion of aliens on ideological grounds. The Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren had already practically reversed the Dennis decision, distinguishing in Yates v. United States in 1953 “an action involving the overthrow of the government from abstract discussion or writing suggesting such action.”55 Activist judges in the 1950s, 1960s, and beyond carved out the concept of “meaningful association,” so that known members of a Communist Party organization, communist military, or communist government had to have performed some voluntary activity to back up ideological sympathy and membership in order to be excludable.56 The 1961 decision in Noto v. United States let off a convicted communist advocate. In 1967, the court effectively extended First Amendment freedom of association to mean that communists might work in American national defense facilities.57 How such an expansive perspective might decide on ideological exclusion provisions eventually came to a test.

The 1972 ruling in Kleindienst v. Mandel addressed the ideological exclusion of a Belgian socialist newspaper editor under INA Section 212(a)(28). The court determined that the exclusion was in order, as Mandel advocated world communist principles; therefore, the denial of a visa for “facially legitimate and bona fide” reasons fell within Congress’s broad, plenary powers to decide aliens’ admission and exclusion. Of note, the court denied Mandel standing to bring a constitutional challenge of a visa denial. The six American plaintiffs asserted that Mandel’s exclusion violated their First Amendment rights of association and to receive information. However, the court declined to rule on First Amendment grounds, saying to do so “would allow all aliens to be admitted and would consequently transform Congress’s plenary power into a ‘nullity.'”58

In 1975, the United States signed the Helsinki Accords, which in part sought to ease the international movement of ideas and people. Sen. George McGovern in 1977 successfully offered an amendment that came to bear his name, ostensibly to further compliance with the Helsinki Accords. The McGovern Amendment to the fiscal 1978 Foreign Relations Authorization Act stacked the deck against Section 212(a)(28). This part of the ideological exclusion law spelled out in eight detailed subsections various alien subversives who were to be rejected for entry into the United States. These exclusionary grounds ranged from group membership to affiliation to various activities supporting the furtherance of subversive causes. Activities included writing, teaching, advocating, and publishing seditious acts against the U.S. government. It granted a waiver to aliens who could prove membership was involuntary.

The McGovern Amendment turned that system on its head; now, waivers for nonimmigrant (i.e., temporary) visas would be automatically recommended unless the alien’s admission would jeopardize U.S. security interests. Further, the Secretary of State would have to certify such exclusions to Congress. Over the next two years, the amendment was refined to clarify that the instant waiver did not apply to terrorists from the Palestine Liberation Organization, nationals of nonsignatory Helsinki countries, or supposed labor unions that were in fact communist fronts.59

Controversy surrounding ideological exclusion festered in the 1970s, but came to a head in the 1980s, with the Reagan administration’s coming to power. Congress said the Carter administration denied more visas under Subsection (27), but critics attacked the Reagan administration exclusions as aimed at foreign policy opponents.60 Section 212(a)(27) kept out aliens believed to seek entry “solely, principally, or incidentally to engage in activities which would be prejudicial to the public interest, or endanger the welfare, safety, or security of the United States.” The only waiver under this exclusion was for certain diplomats. Certain outspoken foreigners received invitations from American groups — primarily left-wing politicians, academics, activists, and others — ostensibly to exchange ideas on foreign policy and military affairs. Most invitations appeared to be attempts to give a forum to critics of various Reagan administration policies, such as in Central America and on nuclear arms.61

Former NATO official Nino Pasti, a former Italian senator and air force general, was president of a peace group and active in the communist front group the World Peace Council. New England pacifist organizations invited Pasti to speak at nuclear freeze rallies, but the State Department denied him a nonimmigrant visa under paragraph (27). Nicaraguan Interior Minister Tomas Borge accepted an invitation to speak at several meetings of those opposed to Reagan administration policies toward the communist government in Nicaragua, but he was denied a visa under paragraph (27). Similarly, the government denied visas to invited speakers Olga Finlay and Leonor Rodriguez-Lezcano. These Cuban women were offered a forum at American universities and at the Third World Woman’s Project of the Institute for Policy Studies.62

American plaintiffs challenged these exclusions, claiming they were being denied their First Amendment right to receive information and to associate with the aliens and that the Immigration and Nationality Act was being misapplied. These cases were consolidated in Abourezk v. Reagan.63

In 1984, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia found for the government, granting its motion for summary judgment. The court ruled on the statutory claims, not the constitutional ones. It determined that the “public interest” terminology “embrace[d] harm to foreign policy interests,” that the McGovern Amendment applied solely to paragraph (28), not (27), and applied the Kleindienst standard of a “facially legitimate and bona fide” basis for visa denial. This last element represented something of a balancing of First Amendment considerations with congressional and executive authority to conduct foreign relations. The court also, having reviewed in camera classified documents regarding the aliens in question, concluded that the visa denials occurred because of the persons being officials of governments or organizations hostile to this country.64

The Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in 1986 vacated the lower court’s ruling and remanded the case. While agreeing that paragraph (27)’s “public interest” clause included foreign policy matters, it ordered the lower court more fully to explore whether this exclusionary statute applied only to intended subversive activities, as the plaintiffs claimed, or also applied to simple entry or presence. This court then accepted the plaintiffs’ claim that the government should only employ the paragraph (27) exclusion if an alien is not excludable under (28) relating to group membership. This argument implied that (27) was given as the basis for exclusion in order to circumvent the McGovern Amendment’s strictures on (28) exclusions.65

In the fall of 1987, the Supreme Court upheld the appellate ruling in a per curium decision.66 The district court, in light of the appellate decision, ultimately determined that the government had not provided sufficient evidence from the legislative history to sustain a practice of paragraph (27) exclusions based on anything other than planned activities. The court additionally applied the appellate-suggested standard to ensure that the McGovern Amendment was not bypassed via (27); the aliens’ memberships would have to be taken into account, and their possible exclusion considered, under paragraph (28). In this case, the court found the government had not presented an adequate case to justify a (27) exclusion based on group membership, which the court claimed should normally be considered under (28). This meant Nino Pasti and both Cuban women could not be rejected for a visa, based on group membership, under paragraph (27); however, Tomas Borge could be kept out because of his intention to travel inside the United States as the Nicaraguan government’s representative.67

Section 212(a)(28), pertaining to membership in communist or other dangerous groups, had already been weakened by the McGovern Amendment. Following the Left’s uproar against the Reagan administration’s apparent reliance on Section 212(a)(27) as an end run, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) went to work. The Moynihan-Frank Amendment became law as Section 901 of the 1988-1989 Foreign Relations Authorization Act. The amendment applied both to immigrants and nonimmigrants (though when extended the next year it was narrowed to apply only to nonimmigrants). The amendment provided that aliens could not be excluded or deported “because of any past, current, or expected beliefs, statements, or associations which, if engaged in by a United States citizen in the United States, would be protected under the Constitution of the United States.” That is, American lawmakers sought to extend the First Amendment to the world — despite foreigners’ lack of corresponding duties that U.S. citizens bear or the status of being subject to the U.S. government’s jurisdiction.68

The original ideological exclusion provisions never seem to have kept out large numbers of aliens, compared with other grounds for exclusion or deportation or as a proportion of total findings of visa ineligibility. Section 212(a)(28) grounds precluded the most aliens from getting visas, compared with (27) and (29) (see Table 1). Paragraph (28) caused around 200 immigrant visa denials a year in the Johnson administration years and from roughly 1,200 to 4,500 nonimmigrant visas to be denied each of those years in the 1960s. A note in the State Department’s report began to appear with the fiscal year 1968 figures that a high percentage (60 percent in FY 1968) of immigrant visa applicants overcome the grounds for refusal. In 1971, State Department reports began to show the number of annual visa refusals overcome.

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